Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1

Waterloo 1


196 BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION


For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp269–71 and pp296–7


The Battle of Waterloo, which took place
on 18 June 1815, marked the final defeat
of the French emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte. This was immediately
recognized as a pivotal event in
European history and the battlefield
became an attraction almost before the
bodies of the dead had been removed.
Memorials and exhibits were set up in
the town of Waterloo as well as at the
main scene of the battle, which lies 3 km (2 miles)
to the south. As a result, some of the exhibits are
themselves historic relics.


Église St-Joseph
This church was built
as a royal chapel in
the 17th century. On
the walls and floors
of the interior are
dozens of memorial
plaques dedicated to
British soldiers who
died at Waterloo, some
of whom had fought
loyally with Wellington
through the Peninsular
War (1808–14) in
Portugal and Spain.

THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO
The legendary Battle of Waterloo was the culmination of the Hundred Days – Napoleon’s
brief but explosive return to power. He had previously been defeated, after his ill-fated
invasion of Russia, and exiled to the Italian island of Elba. In February 1815, he escaped
from Elba and rallied his many supporters in a final bid for European domination. Heading
to retake Brussels, Napoleon reached Waterloo, where his army faced the British, under
the Duke of Wellington, and their allies, the Prussians and other German states, the Dutch
and Belgians. The ensuing battle lasted nine hours; the noise of gunnery could be heard
across the Channel in Britain. The
allied victory was, as Wellington
put it, “a damned near thing”,
and was only assured by the last-
minute arrival of the Prussian
cavalry under Marshal Blücher. It
had cost the lives of 13,000 men;
35,000 were wounded. Napoleon
and his defeated army fled back to
France in disarray, and Napoleon
eventually surrendered a month
later near Rochefort on the west
coast. He was exiled, this time to
the remote island of St Helena,
where he died six years later.

Charge of the Scots Greys and Gordon Highlanders at the Battle
of Waterloo, by English artist Richard Caton Woodville in c.1890

Wax models of French army generals
debating the battle plans, Musée de Cire

Bust of
Napoleon

Musée Wellington

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